Mousumi - IELTS General Reading Practice Paper 7IELTS General
Practice Paper IELTS General Reading Practice Paper 10
The IELTS General Training Reading will give you 60 minutes to
complete 3 sections where the question subject will be everyday/
general topics.
Section 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-14, which are
based on Reading Passage 1 below.
Read the information below and answer Question 1-7
Adopt a Wild Dolphin
Where do the dolphins live?
These dolphins live in Port River Estuary in Adelaide, South
Australia. Researchers have studied them for over 15 years and have
led a campaign to improve protection for the dolphins and their
environment.
Why do the dolphins need your support?
The Port River dolphins face many threats including pollution,
habitat damage, and marine litter. By adopting a dolphin, you will
be helping to protect its habitat and most urgently, to rescue any
dolphin caught in fishing lines.
Choose your dolphin!
These amazing bottlenose dolphins live in three groups. There are
30 dolphins in the main estuary and they socialise with the other
group to the north and one to the south. Each group has a different
habitat type.
Sparke
Sparkle and her calf Twinkle are often seen playing with other
mothers and calf pairs.
Rob Roy
A young, dark and handsome male, Rob Roy is seen mostly on the edge
of the research area.
Scarlett
Scarlett has a scar shaped like a crescent on her dorsal fin,
mostly from a shark attack when she was young.
Spunky
A young Romeo, he’s often seen cruising for potential mates with
his best friend, Buddy.
Buddy
Buddy’s fin shows all the signs of life of rugged encounters with
rivals in the pursuit of romance.
Captain Hook
A handsome, unmarked dolphin, he is named after his very long,
curved dorsal fin.
Phoebe
Phoebe and her calf, Sasha, have both nearly been caught in fishing
lines but are now doing well.
Billie
Billie is one of Adelaide’s best-loved dolphins, famous for
swimming alongside racehorses training in the Port River.
$5 a month from 50 adopters could help monitor an individual whale
or dolphin in the wild for a year.
$10 a month from 100 adopters could help to fund a study of an
individual species in the wild and develop new strategies to
protect it.
$20 a month from 100 adopters could help set up a new field
project.
Adopt Today!
Questions 1-7
[2] can be recognised by a distinctive fin shape____________
[3] carries the marks of an early injury ____________
Which TWO dolphins (A-H):
[5] are often seen spending time together____________
Questions 6 and 7
Circle the correct answer A-D.
[6] Which of the following poses the most immediate threat to the
Port River Dolphins?
A waste from boats
A choosing one dolphin to look after
B making regular donations to the program
C giving money to support only one dolphin
D making a one-off donation to the program
Read the advertisements and answer the questions 8-14
Questions 8-14
Look at the information on companies specialising in removals.
Which company (A-P) is the best choice for the following
situations? You may use the same letter more than once.
…………………………………………………………..
…………………………………………………………..
…………………………………………………………..
…………………………………………………………..
…………………………………………………………..
…………………………………………………………..
…………………………………………………………..
Diving : Taking the Plunge
Have you always wanted to learn to dive?
Getting a Diving Certificate will be one of the most exciting
experiences of your life as you learn how to explore a new world
underwater.
Here’s the 10-step path to becoming a certified diver.
Step 1: Decide that you really want to do it.
Step 2: Find a dive store and dive instructor you like.
Step 3: Discuss how you will complete your open-water
certification: meeting weekly for pool sessions, weekend classes,
home study, a class trip for open-water dives, and more.
Step 4: With your instructor, decide on a plan that best fits your
schedule.
Step 5: Put on a mask, snorkel, and a pair of fins. These are the
basic items of personal equipment that need to be fitted to you by
the diving professional. For reasons of safety and comfort, we
recommend that you buy diving equipment only at a dive store.
Step 6: Be enthusiastic. An important part of your training
involves going back to the classroom and learning about the dive
environment, physics and safety practices.
Step 7: Your first dives will take place in a swimming pool. Be
prepared for your first breath on a regulator (breathing apparatus)
underwater!
Step 8: Go diving. Your open-water training dives provide the
opportunity to practise the skills you learnt in the classroom and
pool work!
Step 9: Use you ‘C-card’ now that you’re a certified diver! Only
card-carrying divers can buy scuba life-support equipment. We also
encourage you to begin right away selecting your personal equipment
regulator, buoyancy compensator and dive computer. Having your own
equipment will make you safer and more comfortable
underwater.
Step 10: Go for more. Your certification is really just the
beginning. You still need to serve a diving internship with your
instructor and other experienced divers. Sign up for more training
or dives under supervision as soon as you can.
Questions 14-19
Using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS FROM THE PASSAGE answer the
following questions.
[14] what THREE pieces of personal equipment do you need to buy
before starting the course?
[15] Why should you buy your equipment from a dive store?
[16] Name ONE topic studied in the classroom.
(17] Where do you do your first dives?
[18] What must you show before being allowed to buy scuba diving
equipment?
[19] Under what conditions can you dive, once you are
certified?
Question 20 -23
The passage ‘Tear No More’ on the next page has 5 paragraphs (A-E).
Choose the most suitable headings for paragraphs B to E from the
list (i-ix) below.
List of Headings
(i) HI panic
(v) III get the bends
(vi) I won’t be able to see
(vii) HI get eaten
(ix) Diving statistics
[22] Paragraph D………………………..
[21] Paragraph C………………………..
[23] Paragraph E………………………..
Questions 24 -27
Complete the notes below using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS FROM THE
PASSAGE for each answer.
Dive with a buddy.
Check your gauges so you don’t run out of air.
Dive no deeper than [24]————-until you feel comfortable.
Don’t dive [25]……………. make a 3-minute safety stop at 15 feet.
If you see a shark [26]………….. avoid splashing, kicking or poking at
fish.
Visualise emergencies and [27] ……….— your responses. Experience
gives you confidence.
Fear No More
A. It’s natural to be scared at first. but statistics show scuba
diving is not particularly dangerous. It is estimated that there
are 2.4 million divers and 17 million dives made in the U.S. per
year. Divers Alert Network, the leading safety organisation for
divers reported only 85 fatalities in the past year. Most of us
find that as our ability increases, our fears decrease. The risks
in scuba diving, while real, can all be reduced significantly by
what you do for your own safety. Here are some of the most common
fears of new scuba divers.
B. It’s understandable if you mistrust your scuba regulator. But
the mechanical failure of your breathing equipment is highly
unlikely. A regulator is simple, strong and designed so that if it
does fail, it delivers more air than you need, not less. You also
have an extra breathing system, and so will your diving buddy. Keep
an eye on gauges and time. If you are running on air you will find
that you have to suck to breathe. You will still have time to
ascend slowly, even if you have to hold your breath. If you stay
above feet and stay out of caves and wrecks — good advice for ail
divers — there is no reason to be afraid of running out of air
underwater.
C. The bends’ is the most decompression sickness most people
associate with diving, but in fact, it is almost preventable.
Divers most often get the bends by going too deep and coming up
quickly. It is not a serious risk if you stay above 60 feet. A
safety stop of three minutes at 15 feet is a wise precaution. Cases
of the bends do occur rarely, but the sickness is normally
treatable.
D. Most fish ignore you or swim away. They have very narrow diets
and eat only what they are accustomed to; however, sometimes sharks
have been known to make attacks on humans. Even here, there is
evidence that the shark mistakes a
human for his regular meal, a seal or sea-lion, and shark attacks
are very rare. In the presence of sharks, remain calm. Don’t annoy
sharks by poking at them. Almost all fish will leave you alone if
you do the same to them.
E. Fear can sometimes overwhelm the intellect and leaves some
people paralysed. The best prevention is training. You will be
taught the correct response to danger. When you practise the
response, it will be there when you need it. When you know just
what to do, you’re much less likely to lose self-control And
experience — simply diving again and again — reduces the general
anxiety level that is natural when diving is still new. When you
realise you are not helpless, your fears are likely to
disappear.
Section 3
Laughter is the Best Medicine
The therapeutic use of laughter — to relieve stress, combat disease
and strengthen the immune system — no longer raises medical
eyebrows. The idea that humour is healthy and that a hearty laugh
can make a person feel much better has gained much medical
respectability in the last two decades.
Humour therapy has been accepted on the basis of considerable
research conducted in the West. The case of Hunter ‘Patch’ Adams (
immortalised by actor Robin Williams in the film Patch Adams), who
developed laughter therapy over 35 years at the Gesundheit
Institute in Virginia, USA is well-known. The other is the story of
Norman Cousins, the late editor of the American paper The Saturday
Review, who was taken ill with a severe connective tissue disease
where the body just wastes away. When doctors gave up on him. he
cured himself with
large doses of vitamin C and comedies starring the Marx Brothers.
Cousins found that ten minutes of genuine belly laughter had an
anaesthetic effect and gave him at least two hours of pain-free
sleep. He recorded his experiences of self-healing through laughter
in a best selling book. Anatomy of an Illness.
This has been an inspiration for many practitioners of laughter
therapy, including Dr Madan Kataria, a Mumbai-based general
practitioner who has pioneered the concept of laughter clubs in
India. As the founder of Laughter Club International. Dr Kataria is
credited with initiating over 300 laughter clubs throughout India.
Each of these conducts regular group laughter sessions on the
premise that laughter is healthy for the body and mind.
We still know very little about what happens in the brain when we
laugh, but there’s a fair amount of evidence to suggest that
laughter has wide-ranging effects on us psychologically and
physiologically. The most obvious effect is on our mood but
laughter is also known to keep away negative emotions like anxiety
and depression, which tend to weaken the immune system. It relieves
stress, a common cause of heart and blood.
Pressure problems. It improves lung capacity and oxygen levels in
the blood and thus Iviates complaints of asthma and bronchitis. It
also releases endorphins, the body’s natural pain killers, thus
reducing the frequency and intensity of arthritic pain and muscular
spasms. It is also known to help with insomnia, migraines,
allergies, and ulcers.
French neurologist, Henri Rubenstein. said that even one minute of
laughter can give the body up to 45 minutes of therapeutic
relaxation, It also reduces heart rate and stimulates appetite and
digestion. French doctor, Pierre Vachet, who studied the physiology
of laughter has concluded that laughter expands the blood vessels
and sends more blood to the extremities. As it sends more oxygen to
every cell in the body, it also serves to speed tissue healing and
stabilise many body functions. Other experiments have shown how
watching funny films lowers our
blood pressure and generates more endorphins in the blood,
producing a feeling of well-being.
However, new insights say that not everyone benefits equally from
this therapy. Researchers say that if people with a strong sense of
humour are less affected by stress, it’s not necessarily the
laughter that’s helping them cope; it could mean that if they are
coping well, they can laugh a lot. In fact, one study showed that
viewing funny videos led to a rise in immune chemical levels, but
that they rose most in people whose tendency to laugh was the
greatest, to begin with.
Questions 28-32
Complete the sentences below using NO MORE THAN 3 WORDS FROM THE
PASSAGE.
Laughter raises [28]—————————in the blood to improve lung function
for conditions like asthma.
Laughter helps the body to release £29]—————————-called
endorphins.
When we laugh. [30]—————————expand, which assist circulation and
help tissue to heal.
Hospital patients who were [31]—————————-the comedies they watched
had the best response to laughter therapy.
Researchers have shown that humour and the ability to play
contribute to [32]————————–
Questions 33-35
Which THREE of the following (A-J) in the passage have NOT been
attributed to laughter?
[33] ———-
[34] ———-
[35] ————-
B improved sleep G stimulated appetite
C slower heart rate H higher blood pressure
D increased anxiety I less stress
E better digestion
Questions 36-40
Match the following names with a phrase (A-I) from the list below
that describes the work of each
36.Dr Hunter Adams 37.Norman Cousins 38.Dr. Madan Kataria 39.Dr.
Henri Rubinstein 40.Dr. Pierre Vachet
List of Phrases